Download the effect of human growth hormone in hypopituitary dwarfism

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts

Hormone replacement therapy (menopause) wikipedia , lookup

Graves' disease wikipedia , lookup

Hypopituitarism wikipedia , lookup

Growth hormone therapy wikipedia , lookup

Transcript
Downloaded from http://adc.bmj.com/ on May 2, 2017 - Published by group.bmj.com
Arch. Dis. Childh., 1964, 39, 535.
THE EFFECT OF HUMAN GROWTH HORMONE IN
HYPOPITUITARY DWARFISM*
BY
A. PRADER, RUTH ILLIG, JUDITH SZIEKY, and H. WAGNER
From the Paediatric Department of the University ofZurich, Switzerland
(RECEIVED FOR PUBLICATnON MAY 14, 1964)
Pituitary growth hormone is a polypeptide molecule with a wide range of effects on protein, lipid, and
carbohydrate metabolism (Korner, 1961; Raben,
1962; Finkel, 1962; Sirek and Sirek, 1964; Knobil
and Hotchkiss, 1964). It promotes growth through
its protein anabolic (nitrogen-retaining) effect.
Growth hormones from different species show
differences in physical, chemical, and immunological
properties and a marked degree of species specificity
in their physiological activity. In man only human
growth hormones are effective. The molecular weight
of human gowth hormone (HGH) is 29,000. Its
structure is not yet exactly known. As yet it can
only be obtained by extracting human pituitaries
gained at necropsy. The amount available is,
therefore, still seriously limited.
In 1958 Raben published the first report of the
successful treatment of a hypopituitary dwarf with
HGH. Since then considerable experience has
accumulated (Hutchings, Escamilla, Deamer, and Li,
1959; Beck, McGarry, Dyrenfurth, Morgen, Bird,
and Venning, 1960; Shepard, Waxman, Bernstein,
and Ferrier, 1960; Lipsett, Bergenstal and Dhyse,
1961; Prader and Illig, 1962; Raben, 1962; Vest and
Girard, 1962; Aarskog, 1963; Daughaday and
Parker, 1963; Francois, Frederich, Bertrand, Gilly
and Morelon-Bachelot, 1963; Trafford, Lifficrap and
Lessof, 1963; Tanner, 1963b), and there is no doubt
that HGH does correct many aspects of the complex
metabolic disturbance in hypopituitary dwarfism and
that it does promote growth in most hypopituitary
dwarfs. However, we still know little about the
optimal preparation and the optimal dosage of
HGH, about the ultimate results, about the effect on
bone maturation, about possible complications, or
about the effect of HGH on other types of dwarfism.
Progress in this field is handicapped by the limited
* Windermere lecture, given by Prof. A. Prader at the meeting of the
British Paediatric Association in Scarborough, April 1964.
amount of HGH available, by our limited knowledge
of the metabolic effect of HGH and its own turnover and metabolic fate, and by the difficulty of
measuring HGH in biological fluids.
We have used HGH during the past four
years and report here (I) some results of a
standardized metabolic HGH test in dwarfs and its
diagnostic and prognostic importance, (2) the growth
effect of prolonged HGH therapy in a dosage that we
believe to be in or near the physiological range, and
(3) the clinical, metabolic, and immunological
findings in patients who have developed antibodies
against HGH.
Before presenting our findings it seems appropriate
to make a few remarks about the diagnosis of growth
hormone deficiency.
Diagosis of Growth Hormone Deficiency
and of Hypopituitary Dwarfism
We consider as hypopituitary those dwarfs whose
growth and bone maturation are markedly retarded,
who respond insufficiently to insulin-induced hypoglycaemia, and who show evidence of secondary
insufficiency of the thyroid and/or the adrenal cortex.
It is still difficult to establish direct proof of growth
hormone deficiency. Easy and reliable methods for
measuring growth hormone in plasma and in urine
are not yet available. The immuno-assay based on
haemagglutination inhibition, originally proposed by
Read and Bryan (1960), has disappointed most
workers. We put an enormous effort into it and
were finally forced to give up (Szeky, Hollander, and
Prader, 1961). The newer radio-immuno-assay,
introduced by Hunter and Greenwood (1962) and by
others (Utiger, Parker, and Daughaday, 1962;
Glick, Roth, Yalow, and Berson, 1963; Utiger, 1964;
Touber, Maingay, and de Ruyter, 1964), holds great
promise. However, it seems that even the normal
fasting subject may have growth hormone levels of
535
Downloaded from http://adc.bmj.com/ on May 2, 2017 - Published by group.bmj.com
536
PRADER, ILLIG, SZEKY, AND WAGNER
nearly zero. Since hypoglycaemia is followed
by a marked increase of the plasma growth
hormone level (Roth, Glick, Yalow, and Berson,
1963; Hunter and Greenwood, 1964), it seems
likely that the increase of the plasma growth
hormone level, induced by insulin and measured by
the new radio-immuno-assay, will become the ideal
test to estimate maximal growth hormone secretion.
We still know very little about the urinary excretion
of growth hormone (Salinas, Monckeberg, and Beas,
1963; Geller and Loh, 1963), but it may become
possible to use this approach for recognizing growth
hormone deficiency.
At the moment we still attach much importance to
the intravenous insulin tolerance test. An insufficient response to insulin-induced hypoglycaemia, that
is a delayed return of the blood glucose level to the
normal, is a strong point in favour of HGH
deficiency. The alternative explanation, an adrenocortical deficiency, is probably wrong. Fajans
(1961) has clearly shown that patients with adrenocortical insufficiency have a normal hypoglycaemia
responsiveness, provided they are well nourished and
on desoxycorticosterone acetate. Hypopituitary
dwarfs are usually well nourished and do not need
desoxycorticosterone acetate. Additional evidence
that their hypoglycaemic unresponsiveness is caused
by HGH deficiency is the fact that it can usually be
corrected with HGH in a dosage that we believe to be
1962) subjects with severe growth hormone deficiency
frequently show a marked resistance to anabolic
steroids. In our clinical experience this resistance
mainly concerns growth, but occasionally also bone
maturation and virilization. It seems that some
growth hormone is necessary to permit a full growth
response to anabolic steroids.
Type and Dosage of Human Growth Homone
All our studies have been performed with HGH
extracted according to Raben's method and containing approximately I 5 U.S.P. units per mg. The dry
powder was dissolved in 0 1 N HC1 and water.
The final pH of the solution was about 3. The
dosage used was with few exceptions always the same,
namely 2 mg./m.2 of body surface area daily in the
five-day metabolic HGH test and 5 mg./m.2 twice
weekly for the long range treatment. For reasons
which we shall discuss in a moment we feel that this
dosage is in or perhaps just below the range of
physiological replacement therapy. This point has
some importance because we would expect physiological replacement therapy to be effective in the
growth hormone-deficient, but not in the normal,
subject. In a normal subject we would expect at
most an im;ediate and transitory metabolic effect
but no continued metabolic and growth response.
Further we would not expect from physiological
replacement therapy the appearance of signs of
acromegaly such as hyperglycaemia or decreased
glucose tolerance which are attributed to overproduction of HGH.
The available information on the normal HGH
plasma level and the HGH turnover rate, which makes
us believe that our dosage is in or somewhat below
the physiological range, is as follows. As Parker,
Utiger, and Daughaday (1962), Roth et al. (1963),
physiological.
The growth curve of most hypopituitary dwarfs is
quite characteristic. It is usually normal in the first
year and then gets flatter and flatter, moving more
and more away from the average growth curve, and
very gradually levels out completely at the age of
about 30. There is no puberty and no pubertal
growth spurt. The final height is 130-140 cm. and
the final skeletal age level rarely more than 13 or 14 HunterandGreenwood(1964),andUtiger(1964)have
years.
shown, the fasting HGH plasma level in the normal
Our limited experience shows that these dwarfs, if individual, measured by radio-immuno-assay, is
treated with testosterone or other anabolic steroids, about 2-8 m Lg./ml., and the half-life of intravenously
attain full skeletal maturity and a final height of injected HGH about 20-30 minutes. Parker et al.
around 150 cm. This is more than in an untreated (1962) estimated the normal daily secretion rate in an
patient but is still not normal. These steroids have a adult to be around 5 mg. or 3 mg./m.2. Since this
protein anabolic effect similar to HGH, but are secretion rate is caculated on the assumption of a
apparently not able to replace completely the growth rather high plasma level of 10 m [Lg./ml., it may be
effect of HGH. This failure can probably be rather lower in reality and may be similar to our
explained by the fact that anabolic steroids accelerate dosage of 2 mg./m.2. One injection every one to
three days of a hormone with a half-life of 20
skeletal maturation more than growth.
At this point we should like to mention a possible minutes is of course far from being physiological.
relation between growth hormone and growth However, the intramuscular injections provide a slow
response to anabolic steroids. In animal experiments absorption as shown by the HGH plasma level which
(Simpson, Asling, and Evans, 1950; Desaulles and is increased for many hours. Ideally, injections
Krzhenb0hl, 1962) as well as in clinical experience should probably be given at intervals not longer than
(Prader and Illig, 1962; van der Werff ten Bosch, 12 to 24 hours. However, since the growth-
Downloaded from http://adc.bmj.com/ on May 2, 2017 - Published by group.bmj.com
EFFECT OF HUMAN GROWTH HORMONE IN HYPOPITUITARY DWARFISM 537
promoting effect is also present when only two normal growth hormone production. We feel also
injections a week are given, we have used a schedule that this test is a valuable aid in the diagnosis of
of two injections a week, keeping the total dosage growth hormone deficiency. Since growth is based
near 2 mg. M..2, day. Though a definite conclusion on N retention the test should enable one to predict
is not possible, the information just reviewed is
strongly suggestive that our dosage is in or below and
certainly not above the physiological range.
A Stadardized Metabolic HGH test
We have developed a simple and standardized
metabolic HGH test which allows us to evaluate the
patient's response to HGH.
The patient is put on an individual but rigidly
constant diet containing 1 -3-2 -6 g. protein per kg.
Any previous endocrine therapy is continued or had
been stopped two to three months before the test.
Urine is collected for daily determination of N and
other constituents. Faeces are not collected. After
a control period of at least 5 days the patient is given
HGH daily for 5 to 6 days. Before and at the end of
the HGH period plasma urea and other plasma
constituents are determined and an intravenous
insulin tolerance test with 4 units m.2 is performed.
We have performed this test in 12 hypopituitary
dwarfs; 4 children with normal stature and 7 children
with non-hypopituitary dwarfism served as controls.
The most interesting results are those of N excretion
and of the insulin tolerance test.
The decrease in daily urinary N excretion during
HGH therapy is virtually identical with the increase
in N retention, since faecal N is hardly affected. As
expected the increase of N retention, expressed in
mg. 'kg. or as percentage of pre-treatment N excretion
(Metcalf and Greene, 1963), is much higher in the
group with hypopituitary dwarfism than in the
control group (Fig. 1). There is in fact hardly any
overlap between the two groups. The absolute
values are remarkably high and would decrease if the
HGH treatment were continued.
We have similarly studied the effect of HGH on
the excretion of creatine, calcium, and x-amino N.
In contrast to the marked difference in N excretion
in the two groups studied we did not find a significant
difference in the creatine, calcium, and x-amino N
excretion in the two groups. As is usually seen with
HGH therapy, the urinary creatine values dropped
if they were high and the calcium excretion increased
in both groups. Among the effects of HGH studied,
N retention is appar nrtly the only one that is clearly
dependent on endogenous HGH secretion.
We feel that this controlled study confirms what
was suggested by recent studies of Lipsett et al. (196 1)
and of Daughaday and Parker (1963), namely that
HGH causes a greater N retention in individuals
deficient in growth hormone than in individuals with
which patients will show a good growth response to
prolonged treatment with HGH in physiological
dosage. Such a prediction is important and helpful
as long as there is so little HGH available.
Hypopit.
200-
Conitrols
Hypopit.
Cc ontroks
ep50
*
01so
ox
-w
100-
*
20
E
ox
orr
5o-
OX
8
idiopathic1
*operatcd
hypopituitary
dwarfs
cranioph
x
normal he
o
J
small stotre
< 3 percentik
FIG. 1.-Increase in N retention with HGH Raben in a dosage of
2 mg_rM.2 24 hours in hypopituitary dwarfs and in controls. The
increase in N retention is calculated as difference of urinary N excretion
between a 5-day period before therapy and from the 2nd to the 6th day
of therapy under a constant diet. It is expressed in mg. kg. and in
percentage of pretreatment N excretion.
The N retention caused by HGH is accompanied
by a decrease in blood urea which also is more
marked in the hypopituitary dwarfs than in the
controls (Fig. 2). The blood a-amino N, which
usually decreases under HGH treatment, showed an
increase in most of the hypopituitary patients
examined (Fig. 2).
Unresponsiveness to insulin-induced hypoglycaemia which is so typical of hypopituitary dwarfs is
usually found to be fully corrected when the insulin
tolerance test is repeated at the end of the HGH test
(Fig. 3). The same is true for the occasionally
seen fasting hypoglycaemia. In the control group
the insulin tolerance test is normal and does not
change in the course of the HGH test, indicating that
normal carbohydrate metabolism is not much
influenced by HGH in the dosage used.
Growth Effect of Prologed HGH Treatment
Some of our patients were put on a prolonged
HGH treatment following the HGH test in order to
check our growth response prediction.
Downloaded from http://adc.bmj.com/ on May 2, 2017 - Published by group.bmj.com
PRADER, ILLIG, SZEKY, AND WAGNER
538
E%
C-
Qobo
12-
0
0
~,I
' c
E
z
z
6-
mla.
a
z
IC
2-
a
hi
Hro
HH
dopre
*
ba. om
.
_
_
FIG. 2.-Effect of HGH Raben given for 5 days
X
°<3JI,hin
_
in
a
m.2 per 24 hours
dwarfs and in controls.
dosage of 2
mg
Four non-hypopituitary dwarfs who had shown
only a modest N retention in the metabolic HGH test
did not accelerate growth during a four-month
treatment period. This appears to confirm our
prediction and the recent report of Daughaday and
Parker (1963), though we realize that the measuring
error and seasonal growth variation make it difficult
to evaluate growth response in such a short period.
However, we decided not to await further confirmation and to stop the experinment in order to save the
hormone for our susceptible hypopituitary patients.
Nine hypopituitary dwarfs, who had all shown a
high N retention in the HGH test, were treated for a
period between nine months and three years. In most
of them the previous treatment with thyroid and/or
corticoids and/or anabolic steroids was continued.
Contrary to expectations only 6 of them showed an
unequivocal growth acceleration. Fig. 4 shows the
growth velocity in centimetres a year before HGH
treatment, during the first half year of treatment,
90
e1
4E
N and 2-amino N in hypopituitary
on serum urea
during the first whole year of treatment, and during
the second and the third years of treatment. The
thin lines represent the 6 successfully treated
patients and the heavy lines the 3 resistant patients
who developed HGH antibodies as we shall see in a
moment.
The mean growth rate in the 6 successful patients
3 4 cm. a year before the HGH treatment,
9 4 cm. a year during the first 6 months of treatment,
8 8 cm. a year during the whole first year, and 5 5
cm. during the second year of treatment. Apparently the growth rate at first is above average, it then
slows down to average, and in some patients it is
below average in the course of the second and the
third year. It has been suggested that this decrease
of growth response might be caused by the development of HGH antibodies. In our experience this is
not so. We think that it represents the typical
was
1m2 iv.
12-
0
E
108-
0
0
SN J.* 2-
6-
PdJA . IS SA2
-i
60
.
HE.
4.
II
1--
020
20
0~~~~~~~~~~~~9
i
0
CRAN,Io-
P
45
* IS I2
-
71WQ=
SA
I
K-R
a
AE
a
S
kv
t
Q
13
-
S%2_ARY 1OAAS.
PGtivts dqon high
DLDoubk
30
f
-
73/12
dosoge
tit
cibodis
-No
60
L4NJTES
FIG. 3.-The effect of HGH on the insulin tokrance test in a boy with
idiopathic hypoppuitary dwarfism (H. Jfrg, age 7 years 7 months), (a)
before and (b) at the end of the meabg
HGH test.
FIG. 4-Growth velocity in hypopituitary dwarfs treated with HGH
Raben in a dosage of 5 mg. /m.2 twice weekly. Growth velocity (in
cm. per year) before HGH treatment (horizontal lines), during the first
half year of treatment, durmg the whole first year, and during the
second and the third years of treatment.
Downloaded from http://adc.bmj.com/ on May 2, 2017 - Published by group.bmj.com
EFFECT OF HUMAN GROWTH HORMONE IN HYPOPITUITARY DWARFISM 539
catch-up growth that we see for instance in a
hypothyroid child when he is put on thyroid therapy.
There too growth rate is first faster than average in
spite of physiological dosage and slows down in the
course of the treatment. It is not possible to discuss
catch-up growth now, but it should be pointed out
that catch-up growth is a general phenomenon seen
whenever the cause of retarded growth can be
corrected (Prader, Tanner, and von Harnack, 1963;
Tanner, 1963a).
Figs. 5-11 show the details of the HGH effect on
growth and development of two of our successfully
treated patients.
Fig. 5 is a conventional growth chart of a boy who
had a craniopharyngioma removed at the age of 21
years. As usual this operation saved the patient
from neurological deterioration, but led to a
deterioration of his pituitary function. During the
post-operative 3 years he scarcely grew at all
despite combined substitution therapy with thyroid
and cortisone in physiological dosage and despite the
addition of large doses of anabolic steroids. This
growth failure is a typical example of the unresponsiveness of children with severe organic pituitary
insufficiency to anabolic steroids. At the age of 6
years HGH therapy was added to the former
combined endocrine substitution therapy. During
the 3 years of HGH therapy growth was markedly accelerated compared with the pre-treatment
period. This is best seen in the serial photographs of
our patient (Fig. 6). In the 37 months before HGH
therapy he grew 2 5 cm. and in the 41 months of
HGH treatment 16 cm. Under treatment his facial
appearance and his body proportions changed from
those of an infant to those of a normal schoolboy.
Fig. 7 shows height increments or growth velocity
in centimetres a year of the same patient. This way
of plotting growth gives a far better insight into the
dynamics of growth than the conventional growth
chart. It shows very clearly how our patient grew
less than 1 cm. a year in the years between the
operation for his craniopharyngioma and the
beginning of HGH therapy, that growth hormone
increased his growth rate to 9-6 cm. a year during
the first few months of therapy, and that it dropped
later under the continued HGH therapy to about
4 6 cm. a year. When HGH therapy was interrupted, growth decreased again to the original rate of
less than 1 cm. a year and increased to 4 cm. a year
when HGH treatment was taken up for the second
time.
Fig. 8, from the same patient, is a conventional
development chart showing height-age (Heimendinger, 1958), weight-age (Heimendinger, 1958), and
bone-age (Tanner, Whitehouse, and Healy, 1962).
-
2A
We still use this type of chart to evaluate and to
demonstrate simultaneously the effect of a growthpromoting treatment on growth, on weight gain, and
on skeletal maturation. Tanner (1962) has criticized
this type of chart and has good reasons to do so.
However, the chart still has its value if one is aware
that in the normal subject bone-age will by definition
always reach the top of the chart while height- and
weight-age will reach variable levels depending on
genetic and environmental influences. In our
patients the chart clearly demonstrates that skeletal
maturation, which hardly moved before HGH was
given, accelerated under HGH treatment and was
faster than growth and weight gain in spite of the
fact that the dosage of anabolic steroids was much
smaller than before. We have seen a similar acceleration of bone-age in all 5 hypopituitary patients whom
we have treated successfully for more than nine
months with a combination of HGH and thyroid in
small doses and in some patients also cortisone and
anabolic steroids.
Fig. 9 is again a conventional growth chart from a
girl with idiopathic hypopituitary dwarfism. In this
patient thyroid function is probably normal. At the
age of 5 to 6 her growth was much accelerated by
large amounts of anabolic steroids and small doses of
thyroid. With thyroid alone in a physiological
dosage growth slowed down. At the age of 8 years
HGH as the only therapy was started and very
successfully continued for the next 2 years.
The growth rate is again better analysed in a
growth velocity chart (Fig. 10). Before therapy the
growth rate is far below average, about 2 cm. a year.
With anabolic steroids it is about 8 cm. a year or just
above average. With thyroid alone it is again below
average but still better than without any treatment.
Growth hormone accelerated the growth rate to
10 cm. during the first year and to about 8 cm. during
the second year. This chart is a beautiful demonstration of the growth-promoting effect of the two
anabolic hormones, the anabolic steroids on one
hand and HGH on the other hand.
The development chart of this patient (Fig. 11) is
most interesting. It shows the well-known fact that
anabolic steroids accelerate bone maturation more
than growth, whereas HGH alone appears to
accelerate growth more than bone maturation.
Acquired HGH resistance and HGH antibodies
After these examples of successfully treated
patients we have to analyse our 3 growth-resistant
hypopituitary dwarfs (Prader, Szeky, Wagner, Illig,
Touber, and Maingay, 1964). These 3 patients all
developed high titres of specific HGH antibodies
during the first few months of treatment. The
Downloaded from http://adc.bmj.com/ on May 2, 2017 - Published by group.bmj.com
1
Post. Pit.
60- 3O0.qdi
25 - 20o./d.
Thyroid
Predwse
8g.d.w
aqa
.
Cortisone
25
5
S/
iurobolin ) Danabol T
o01 Q05
AnXbolic 2 3- iiwhWM
crr.
4
Q02 Wa 1/d
Steroids
I
150
40o-
HGH Raben
gI
I
1D
iIFi
of5,
5mrcficm
:isIopharyrgiornI
s258
27:--2
Ii
/2!
73!1
71!2
.
'C4-5cr.
G9QOc-
88--c-
55 C:c-
F.-
egh
I
i,
l~~I
!~~I
'
'
I
2'
I
I
I
a
a
8
7
4
5
Chronological Age, years
3
IDI
I
r----T-
FIG. 5.-Growth of a 'hypophysectomized' (removal of a craniopharyngioma at the age of 2i) boy (St. Rene) before and during treatment
with HGH.
FIG. 6.-Serial photographs of a 'hypophysectomized' boy (same
patient as in Fig. 5) before and during treatment with HGH.
FIG. 7-Growth velocity of a 'hypophysectomized' boy (same patient
as in Fig. 5 and 6) before and during treatment with HGH.
FIG. 8.-Development of a 'hypophysectomized' boy (sane patient as
in Fig. 5-7) before and during treatment with HGH.
11
Post- Pit.
FiG. 5
_60 3Od.
6_ Thyroid
Post Pit.
=
Thyroid
60 - 30-d
Z
2 5w4/C
18s ~~~~5
4_
2
Cort!sone
Cor-tisone
Anabolic 23I ng//lr
3_Ster-oids
32..S.
HGH Roben
~~~~~~~~
g
I
II
I
I
l~terntr~ ~'
ep*
\t0
m
C.02w4
11
I
~~~I
I I
0o
~~~I
I I
I
/
_, ~ ~ ~~~i /
I
O;erctioc of :
oo aryng Om
r ar
I:
II
c
4-
I
I
2..
S-kletl
I
---II
~~~II
Ap-
II
I
"tA
I
2
Age. years
FIG. 7
.
II
0
Chronological
4.'
a
c
ii
It
01005
_
E6
(0
I-
C
_
M
3iii
I|"-
HGH Roben
I~~
DoIobol
Dirobolm I
2
Durobolip *D* n3bci w
23 ii Cg.5
CS
Aaxotic 1 E
Steroads
25 -20p./
Predse
25 -20q o/
P-edn some
5
T3
=_
3
4
II
I
5
6
7
8
Chronological Age. yeas
FIG. 8
9
V
II
~ Ij
Downloaded from http://adc.bmj.com/ on May 2, 2017 - Published by group.bmj.com
EFFECT OF HUMAN GROWTH HORMONE IN HYPOPITUITAR Y DWARFISM 541
ChosS
|
33,qa
£
S
a
;t
cw
E
1
2
4
/.
(a
Chronological Age. years
FiG. 11
lAge. Pu
3D
SD
90
sof
FIG. 9.-Growth of a girl with idiopathic hypopituitary dwarfism
(S. Anna).
FIG. O.-Growth velocity of a girl with idiopathic hypopituitary
dwarfism (same patient as in Fig. 9) before and during treatment with
HGH.
FIG. I I.-Development of a girl with idiopathic hypopituitary dwarfism
(same patient as in Figs. 9 and 10) before and during treatment with
h
HGH.
I
IT
3
1
cL
w
E
5.
I
*
L.
c)
HNnan Growth Hrmwn R b
o 10_
-
Human Growth Hormone Ruben
Anaboic Sterods
, 15_
,I
Durobolin C
Anabolic Steroids
Fi&9
20_
Thyroid
5
.
.
.
.
6
7
8
9
Il
Chronological A,ige.
FiG. 10
years
I
1
1
metabolic and growth effect of HGH was suppressed.
The other 6 patients, some of them treated for a much
longer period, developed no or only low titres of
HGH antibodies which did not interfere with the
HGH effect on growth and metabolism.
Our group in Zurich and Dr. Touber and Dr.
Maingay in Amsterdam* demonstrated the development of these antibodies and their specificity by two
different methods. One is the haemagglutination
method (Szeky, Hissig, and Prader, 1962) and the
other the radio-immuno-assay method (Touber et al.,
1964). The basis and the results of these methods
are as follows.
The sera of our 3 patients agglutinate HGHcoated sheep erythrocytes but do not agglutinate
erythrocytes coated with human albumin, with
* Central Iaboratory of the Netherlands Red Cross Blood Transfusion Service (Diretor: Prof. J. J. van Loghem).
Downloaded from http://adc.bmj.com/ on May 2, 2017 - Published by group.bmj.com
PRADER, ILLIG, SZtKY, AND WAGNER
542
cm
L
T%rWd
L
0.
Ca1S_
Ur-
mm
inn
awm
P
HGH
i
flaes
Ii
#RL
2
3
4
CirmokA_jicl
6S
5
Age. yees
FIG. 12.-Growth of a boy with familial hypopituitary dwarfism
(A. Ernst) before and during treatment with HGH, and development
of agglutinatmg HGH antibodis which blocked the HGH effect on
N retention and on growth. The interrupted growth line represents
the patient's untreated girl cousin (S. Margrit) who has the same type
of dwarfism. (From Prader et al. (1964).)
90
t'ann
4u
/mff iv.
human y-globulin, or with bovine growth hormone.
The agglutination can be inhibited by incubating the
sera first with HGH or with human serum. Sera
of patients with acromegaly are more effective in this
respect than sera of normal individuals, whereas sera
of patients with hypopituitary dwarfism have only a
minimal effect.
Autoradiography of the immuno-electrophoretic
pattern of serum incubated with HGH 1311 shows, in
the same patients, large amounts of the radioactive
hormone bound to the 7 S-y-globulin precipitation
line. This can still be demonstrated in serum
dilutions up to 1 in 10,000. Some y-globulin binding is also present in 3 of the 6 successfully treated
patients, but only in serum dilutions up to I in 10 or
I in 100.
The results of these two methods show clearly that
our patients have developed high titres of specific
HGH antibodies and that those antibodies are
7 S-y-globulins.
Fig. 12 is a growth chart of one of these patients, a
boy with familial hypopituitary dwarfism. HGH
treatment given between the ages of 5 and 8 did not
accelerate the patient's growth. The HGH test
before treatment increased the N retention by 4600(
of the preceding control urinary N. After the
appearance of antibodies the same test increased the
N retention only by 130O. The agglutination antibody titre increased during HGH treatment and
dropped when treatment was interrupted. HGH
given several months after treatment had been stopped caused a precipitous drop and a quick rebound,
typical of an anamnestic immune reaction.
Fig. 13 shows the results of the insulin tolerance
test in another patient who developed HGH antibodies. Before the appearance of antibodies, the
blood glucose curve is flat (a) and gets normal under
HGH (c). After the development of antibodies the
flat curve (b) can no longer be corrected with HGH
(d).
------------__
E
c
In
0
8
0
20-
1i
3;0
46
o
90
20
MINUTES
FIG. 13.-The effect of HGH on the insulin tolerance test in a boy with
idiopathic hypopituitary dwarfism (I. Manuel, age 8) before and after
the appearance of HGH antibodies. Lines a and b without HGH and
lines c and d with HGH. Lines a and c before and lines b and d after
the development of antibodies. (From Prader et al. (1964).)
In summary, the treatment of these patients with
exogenous and probably somewhat denatured HGH
stimulated the production of HGH antibodies which
suppressed the effect of exogenous HGH on protein
and carbohydrate metabolism. The fact that the
antibodies can be absorbed by serum of patients
with acromegaly but not by serum of hypopituitary
dwarfs suggests that these antibodies are not only
active against exogenous HGH but also against
endogenous HGH.
The presence or the development of haemagglutinating HGH antibodies has previously been reported
by Conti, Sereno, Luchetti, Recchia, and Isidori
(1962) and by Trafford et al. (1963). However,
these workers found only low titres of antibodies,
Downloaded from http://adc.bmj.com/ on May 2, 2017 - Published by group.bmj.com
EFFECT OF HUMAN GROWTH HORMONE IN HYPOPITUITAR Y DWARFISM 543
which apparently did not suppress the HGH effect on Raben (New England Center Hospital, Boston) prepared
the HGH. Dr. Trudi Mirset helped in the management
metabolism and growth.
the patients, and Dr. Edna Sobel (Dept. of Pediatrics,
We do not yet know why 3 out of our 9 patients of
Einstein College of Medicine, New York) in the preparadeveloped HGH antibodies with such a disastrous tion of the manuscript.
clinical result. It could be that these 3 patients have
never produced any HGH at all and have, therefore,
no immunological tolerance for HGH, whereas the 6
REFERNCES
other patients secrete small but insufficient amounts Aarskog, D. (1963). Human growth hormone in dwarfism since
of HGH and have, therefore, a normal immunologbirth. Amer. J. Dis. Child., 105, 368.
Beck, J. C., McGarry, E. E., Dyrenfurth, I., Morgen, R. O., Bird, E.
ical tolerance for it.
D., and Venning, E. H. (1960). Primate growth hormone studies
The importance of our observation about HGH
in man. Metabolism, 9, 699.
Conti,
C., Sereno, L., Luchetti, L., Recchia, O., and Isidori, A. (1962).
this
antibodies is twofold. As doctors we deplore
Detection of anti-STH antibodies in man. Folia enudocr. (Roma),
unexpected and disappointing complication of an
15, 163.
enthusiastically welcomed new type of treatment. Daughaday, W. H., and Parker, M. L. (1963). Sulfation factor
measurement
as an aid in the recognition of pituitary dwarfism.
As scientists we note with interest that man is able to
J. clin. Endocr., 23, 638.
develop antibodies against a homologous protein Desaulles, P. A., and Krihenbdhl C. (1962). Differentiation of
action of various anabolic steroids. In Protein Metabolism
hormone, which suppress the physiological effect of
(Ciba int. Symposium, Leyden, 1962), ed. F. Gross, pp. 170-184.
this hormone.
Springer, Berlin.
Summary
Human growth hormone (HGH) Raben has been
used in a dosage of 2 mg./m.2/day or 5 mg./m.2 twice
weekly. This dosage is probably in or below, but
certainly not above, the range of physiological
replacement therapy.
In a standardized five-day metabolic HGH test
hypopituitary dwarfs retain more N than children
without GH deficiency. This test is a valuable
diagnostic help in hypopituitary dwarfism.
A prolonged treatment with HGH accelerates
growth in hypopituitary dwarfs but not in children
without GH deficiency. Growth rate, induced by
this treatment, is first above average and later average
or below average for age. This decreasing response
to HGH is typical for the general phenomenon of
catch-up growth and is not caused by the development of antibodies.
Of 9 hypopituitary dwarfs, treated for at least 9
months, 3 were growth resistant from the beginning
in spite of a high N retention in the preceding HGH
test. This resistance is caused by the development
of high titres of specific HGH antibodies in the very
first few months of treatment. These antibodies
suppress the effect of HGH both on metabolism and
on growth. The unexpected occasional induction in
man of antibodies against a homologous protein
hormone is of great interest. The possibility that
these antibodies might be active not only against the
exogenous but also against the endogenous honnone
could have a far-reaching biological importance.
Prof. E. Uehlinger (Dept. of Pathology, University of
Zurich), Prof. H. U. Zollinger (Dept. of Pathology, St.
Grallen), and Prof. Chr. Hedinger (Dept. of Pathology,
Winterthur) provided the hurmn pituitarics. Dr. M. S.
Fajans, S. S. (1961). Some metabolic actions of corticosteroids.
Metabolism, 10, 951.
Finkel, M. J. (1962). Human growth hormone. Metabolic effects
and experimental and therapeutic applications. Amer. J. Med.,
32, 588.
Frangois, R., Frederics, A., Bertrand, J., Giuy, R., and MorelonBachelot (1963). Action de 1'hormone de croissance humaine
(HGH) sur le nanisme hypophysaire. PdIiatrie, 18, 49.
GeUer, J., and Loh, A. (1%3). Identification and measurement of
growth hormone in extracts of human urine. J. clin. Endocr., 23,
1107.
Glick, S. M., Roth, J., Yalow, R. S., and Berson, S. A. (1963).
Immunoassay of human growth hormone in plasma. Nature
(Loud.), 199, 784.
Heimendinger, J. (1958). Die Ergebnisse von Korpermessungen an
5000 Basler Kindern von 0 bis 18 Jahren. Schweiz. med. Wschr.,
88, 785.
Hunter, W. M., and Greenwood, F. C. (1962). A radio-immunoelectrophoretic assay for human growth hormone. Biochem. J.,
85, 39P.
( 1964). Studies on the secretion of human-pituitary-growth
hormone. Brit. med. J., 1, 804.
Hutchings, J. J., Escamilla, R. F., Deamer, W. C., and Li, C. H. (1959).
MetaboLic changes produced by hulman growth hormone (LI) in a
pituitary dwarf. J. clin. Endocr., 19, 759.
Knobil, E., and Hotchkss, J. (1964). Growth hormone. Ann. Rev.
Physiol., 26, 47.
Korner, A. (1961). Growth hormone. In Modern Trends in
Edornology, (Second Series), ed. H. Gardiner-Hill, pp. 19-42.
Butterworths, London.
Lipsett, M. B., Bergenstal, D. M., and Dhyse, F. G. (1961). Metabolic
studies with human growth hormone in dwarfism and acromegaly.
J. clin. E;docr., 21, 119.
Metcalf, W., and Greene, H. G. (1963). A quantitative expression for
nitrogen retention with anabolic steroids. I. Norethandrolone.
Metabolism, 12, 899.
Parker, M. L, Utiger, R. D., and Daughaday, W. H. (1962). Studies
on human growth hormone. H. The physiological disposition
and metabolic fate of human growth hormone in man. J. clin.
Invest., 41, 262.
Prader, A., and Illig, R. (1962). Use of anabolic agents in disorders
of growth. In Protein Metabolism (Ciba Int. Symposiwn, Leyden,
1962), ed. F. Gross, pp. 383-397. Springer, Berlin.
-, Szeky, J., Wagner, H., lhg R., Touber, J. L., and Maingay, D.
(1964). Lancet. In the pre.
, Tanner, J. M., and von Harnack, G. A. (1963). Catch-up
growth foliowing illness or starvation. J. Ped&t., 62, 646.
Raben, M. S. (1958). Treatment of a pituitary dwarf with human
growth hormone. J. cdin. EAdocr., 13, 901.
(1962). Growth hormone. I. Physiologic aspects. New
E;gl. J. Med., 26, 31.
Read, C. H., and Bryan, G. T. (1960). The immunological assay of
human growth hormone. Rec. Progr. Hormone Res., 16, 187.
Downloaded from http://adc.bmj.com/ on May 2, 2017 - Published by group.bmj.com
544
PRADER, ILLIG, SZEKY, AND WAGNER
Roth, J., Glick, S. M., Yalow, R. S., and Berson, S. A. (1963).
Secretion of hurman growth hormone: physiologic and experimental modification. Metabolism, 12. 577.
Salinas, A., Moncketerg. F.. and Beas, F. (1963). Immunological
detection of growth hormone in normal human urine. Iancet,
2, 302.
Shepard, T. H., Waxman, S., Bernstein, N., and Ferrier, P. (1960).
Human growth hormone. 11. Further study of its effects on
growth in dwarfism. J. Pediat.. 57, 363.
Simpson. M. E., Asling, C. W., and Evans. H. M. (1950). Some
endocrine influences on skeletal growth and differentiation.
Yale J. Biol. Mfed., 23, 1.
Sirek, 0. V., and Sirek, A. (1964). The physiology of growth
hormone. Ergebn. inn. Mfed. Kinderheilk.. (n.s.). 21, 217.
Szeky. J., Hhssig, A., and Prader, A. (1962). Ober Antikorper gegen
menschliches Wachstumshormon vom Typus Raben bei Patienten
mit Zwergwuchs. Helv. paediat. Acta, 17, 411.
, Hollander, L., and Prader. A. (1961). Zur immunologischen
Bestimmung des menschlichen Wachstumshormons: eine
Vereinfachung der Readschen Technik. ibid., 16, 691.
Tanner. J. M. (1962). The evaluation of grow-th and maturity in
children. In Protein Mfetabolism (Ciba int. Svmposium, Levden,
1962), ed. F. Gross, pp. 361-382. Springer, Berlin.
(1963a). The regulation of human growth. Child Develop., 34,
817.
(1963b). Methodische und therapeutische Studien des menschlichen Wachstumshormons in der Padiatrie. 61. Tagung
Deutsche Ges. f. Kinderhkeilk, K61n, September 1963.
W, hitehouse, R. H., and Healy, M. J. R. (1962). A nes system
for estimating skeletal maturity from the hand and wrist, with
standards derised from a study of 2,610 healthy British children.
International Children's Centre, Paris [ms.].
Touber, J. L., Maingay, D., and de Ruyter, H. A. (1964). A radioimmunoassay for human growth hormone in serum. .4cta Med.
Neerlandica. In the press.
Trafford, J. A. P., Lillicrap, D. A., and Lessof, M. H. (1963). Human
growth hormone in pituitary infantilism. Lancet, 1. 1 128.
Utiger. R. D. (1964). Extract on and radioimmunoassay of growth
hormone in human serum. J. clin. Endocr., 24, 60.
Parker, M. L., and Daughaday. W. H. (1962). Studies on
human growth hormone. I. A radioimmunoassay for human
growth hormone. J. clin. Invest., 41, 254.
van der Werff ten Bosch. J. J. (1962). Discussion. In Protein
Metabolism (Ciba int. Symposium, Levden, 1962). ed. F. Gross,
pp. 401-3. Springer, Berlin.
Vest, M.. and Girard, J. (1962). Stoffwechselwirkungen von
gereinigtem menschlichem Wachstumshormon beim Zaergwuchs
und bei der Anorexia nersosa im Kindesalter. Dtsch. med.
4s-/hr., 87. 1705.
Downloaded from http://adc.bmj.com/ on May 2, 2017 - Published by group.bmj.com
The Effect of Human Growth
Hormone in Hypopituitary
Dwarfism
A. Prader, Ruth Illig, Judith Sz?ky and H. Wagner
Arch Dis Child 1964 39: 535-544
doi: 10.1136/adc.39.208.535
Updated information and services can be found at:
http://adc.bmj.com/content/39/208/535.citation
These include:
Email alerting
service
Receive free email alerts when new articles cite this
article. Sign up in the box at the top right corner of
the online article.
Notes
To request permissions go to:
http://group.bmj.com/group/rights-licensing/permissions
To order reprints go to:
http://journals.bmj.com/cgi/reprintform
To subscribe to BMJ go to:
http://group.bmj.com/subscribe/